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- Domenico
Pacitti
Verona's
answer to the brain drain: the case of Luca Benatti
- Dear Domenico,
- As further confirmation of
your reports on Italian universities I submit my own case. I might also add
that I can testify to the correctness of what you say about negative Roman
Catholic and moral issues.
- Last February I went to
England to carry out scientific research on an instrument which I had
invented for diagnosing the state of human health through observation of the
retina. This instrument, subsequently taken up by a Swiss company, still
required further refinement in order to function properly. The University of
Leeds kindly offered me the opportunity to research the instrument on a PhD
course. They duly wrote to my Italian university, the University of Verona,
for confirmation of my academic career, but unfortunately Verona failed to
send the required documents and so I lost the opportunity and was unable to
register on the course. I had also found funding for my university fees and
an opportunity to commercialise a new clinical test. Both fell through.
- I enclose an article on my
case published in the Verona "L'Arena” on 7 September 2004, telling
how my story began in 1999 when I attended a course in Padua on the Lüscher
Colour Test. On suggesting ways in which the test could be improved, I was
invited to Switzerland in 2000 by the test’s inventor Max Lüscher. Over
the last five years I have rebuilt this instrument some fifty times in an
attempt to perfect it. In the course of the same period I wrote to numerous
Italian universities asking not for money but simply for the opportunity to
carry out my experimentation on twenty subjects. My letters met with total
indifference and I did not receive a single reply.
- On returning to Italy I went
to see the dean of the University of Verona’s faculty of education
sciences where I had taken my degree. I was accompanied by student
representatives and journalists. The dean confirmed my top marks but was
unable to supply me with written documentation for bureaucratic reasons. I
was told I would have to wait several weeks. I am still waiting. I have
meanwhile decided to write to SOLVIT, an online problem solving network for
citizens of EU member states. But I am having to write to the UK office
following negative experience with the SOLVIT office in Italy.
- Now at the age of forty I
find myself having to be supported by my parents who are pensioners. Is it
really possible that Italians are still obliged to go abroad to have their
work appreciated? How do you see this case and what else can I do?
- ––
Luca Benatti, Leeds,
England
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- Dear Luca,
- As you no doubt know, but for
the benefit of any of our readers who may still have doubts on the matter,
the real reason why Italians are still obliged to go
abroad to have their work appreciated is because Italian universities have
no room for genuine talent, independent initiatives or intellectual honesty.
Their doors remain open only to mediocrity and obsequiousness. The inhabitants of Italian universities
certainly recognise talent when they see it, but they avoid it like the
plague because it makes them both nervous and envious. The trouble is that
genuine talent can produce unpredictable and uncontrollable results.
Admitting talent to their ranks would seriously risk upsetting the
fragile internal hierarchy and the delicate equilibrium of mediocrity.
- Senior Italian academics, or
“barons”, tend to have a view of themselves which is, at times
comically, at strict variance with reality, as in the tale of the
emperor’s new clothes. In order to participate in this degrading farce,
you must be prepared to assure barons constantly of their unquestioned
magnificence. (All correspondence to an Italian rector must still be addressed to
the “Magnifico Rettore”.) Only then can you join the endless queue of
fawning sycophants in search of the necessary “raccomandazioni” to gain
access to a sinecure for life. Successful candidates will also gain the
privilege of being allowed to help squander research funding on work which
has little to do with truth, intellectual freedom and the spirit of
scientific enquiry.
- As far I am able to judge,
your work appears to have the necessary requirements in terms of honest
originality and genuine merit to meet with the predictable blank wall
reception from Italian academia. This impression is supported by the
positive reception you received from the Swiss psychologist Max Lüscher, a
man whose work has brought him worldwide recognition. It is further
supported by the offer you received from the respected University of Leeds
to read for a PhD.
- I therefore see your case as
falling squarely within the Italian brain drain tradition – with the cruel
twist that they actively prevented you from doing even that. From the
additional information you sent me, I understand that the University of
Leeds contacted two of your former teachers at the University of Verona for
references and that they failed either to reply or to forward the requests
to the appropriate administrative office at the University of Verona. Again,
this is fairly normal practice within Italian academia, reflecting as it
does the unmistakeable Italian academic stamp of ignorance, indolence and
indifference.
- As
regards advice, you could look for an Italian trade
union, association or radical group willing to provide the necessary legal
and financial assistance to sue the University of Verona for damages. By all
means give SOLVIT a try, though I very much doubt whether the UK office will
be able to penetrate the Italian academic black hole. Keep
Verona under pressure for your certificates and ask the University of
Leeds to renew its PhD offer for the forthcoming academic year
and try to re-arrange funding. You should invite Max Lüscher, the University of
Leeds and all the foreign scientists, researchers and academics you know to undertake initiatives
against Italian universities to encourage them to reform their corrupt and
inefficient system. Meanwhile, avoid supplying Italian universities with your
unpublished work or details of your ongoing research since you run the very real
risk of finding the fruits of your hard earned research published under some baron’s name.
December
17 2004
Note: Your questions for Pacitti
should be sent to:- letters@justresponse.net.
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Domenico Pacitti is Editor of JUST
Response. He
has written over 400 articles against corruption in Italy. He has taught
philosophy, linguistics and Chinese at universities in the UK and Italy
and currently teaches English language and American literature at the
University of Pisa |
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